In May 2023, during a stop on The Howard Stern Show, Carrie pulled out one of the most unexpected covers of her career and somehow made it sound like it always belonged to her. โMama, Iโm Coming Home,โ Ozzyโs 1991 power ballad, already hits hard on its own. But when Underwood took the mic, she didnโt just sing it. She stripped it back to its bones and rebuilt it as a haunting country confession.
For those unfamiliar with the original, this wasnโt one of Ozzyโs bat-biting, devil-horn-throwing anthems. It was softer, but in a way that cut even deeper. Written with Motรถrheadโs Lemmy Kilmister and guitarist Zakk Wylde, the song is a gritty love letter about weariness and needing shelter after a life lived on the edge. The Prince of Darkness showing his most human side. Carrie found a way to make it even more personal.
She didnโt try to out-metal the metalhead. Instead, she leaned into what she does best by laying it all out there with a voice that could break glass and hearts in the same breath. The a cappella ending alone felt like it froze time. One fan said it gave them chills. Another admitted to tearing up. Even the diehard rock crowd couldnโt deny the weight of it.
This wasnโt just some off-the-cuff performance. Carrieโs been open for years about her rebellious teenage phase blasting Ozzy in the house while her mom tried to shut it down. She told Stern that her mom thought the music was too dark, but she always believed there was more to it than that. โThereโs a lot of love in these songs if you actually listen to them,โ she said. And thatโs exactly what she brought out in her version.
Turns out she even had Sharon Osbourneโs blessing before ever taking the song to the stage. That alone shows how serious she was about getting it right.
She first tackled this song back in 2022 for an Apple Music Sessions release. Fans loved it then, but her Stern Show version took it to another level. There were no big lights or pyrotechnics. Just Carrie and the music, telling a story that felt like it was her own.
Itโs all part of a bigger shift happening in her world. With her SiriusXM channel Carrieโs Country, sheโs blending her gospel roots with her love for rock and old-school country. Sheโs not picking one side of the fence. Sheโs knocking the whole thing down and walking straight through.
Underwoodโs tribute happened long before Ozzyโs passing, but looking back now, it feels like something more. Like she knew that moment mattered. Like she wanted to show her love and respect while the man was still around to feel it.
Some artists talk about honoring their influences. Carrie lives it. No smoke and mirrors. Just a voice, a memory, and a song that has clearly stayed with her since she was a kid.
Ozzy might have built his legend in fire and chaos, but Carrie met that energy with calm power. And in doing so, she didnโt just cover one of his most iconic tracks. She made it feel brand new.